Part One: Life
XXVII
I ’M nobody! Who are you? | |
Are you nobody, too? | |
Then there ’s a pair of us—don’t tell! | |
They ’d banish us, you know. | |
How dreary to be somebody! | 5 |
How public, like a frog | |
To tell your name the livelong day | |
To an admiring bog! |
Part One: Life
XXXII
HOPE is the thing with feathers | |
That perches in the soul, | |
And sings the tune without the words, | |
And never stops at all, | |
And sweetest in the gale is heard; | 5 |
And sore must be the storm | |
That could abash the little bird | |
That kept so many warm. | |
I’ve heard it in the chillest land, | |
And on the strangest sea; | 10 |
Yet, never, in extremity, | |
It asked a crumb of me. |
© Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews
7 comments:
I love Emily Dickinson and have since middle school, but what puts the icing on the cake is that you can sing her poems to The Yellow Rose Of Texas or Amazing Grace or The House Of The Rising Sun. I prefer the first one.
I'm off to read what you've been up to these past few hours...I arrived late so I'm blog hopping like crazy.
I love Dickinson. Thanks for participating.
Bybee, I learned the Yellow Rose of Texas trick back when I was in school. I don't know that it made reciting them in front of the class anymore fun. But it did help in the memorizing :)
Just now I caught myself humming along when I was making the post.
Great poetry choices!
We used to have a ice cream truck that played "Yellow Rose of Texas" that used to drive by our dorm all the time. My roommates and I used to sing along but singing "Because I could not stop for death, he kindly stopped for me!" at the top of our lungs... Good times. :)
I really love Dickinson though.
Good job with all the reading! Keep it up!
I love Dickinson! When I used to teach English, I always used some of her poems in the poetry unit, and they were some of the most appealing poems for the kids.
Oh, Emily Dickinson. So wonderful!
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